- META AI asks you to choose to send publicly in the app’s Discovery Feed by default
- Meta has a new warning up-up but unintentional sharing is still an option
- You can opt out of getting your conversations to become publicly through the Meta AI app’s settings
The Meta AI app’s somewhat unique contribution to the AI Chatbot -Apprum is Discovery Feed, which allows people to show the interesting things they do with the AI assistant.
However, it turns out that many people were not aware that they did not just send these prompts and conversation excerpts to themselves or their friends to see. When you press “Share” and “Post to Feed”, you share these chats with everyone, like a public Facebook post.
Discovery Feed is a strangeness in some ways, a transplant of the AI Chatbot experience on a more classic social media structure. You will find AI-Generated images of surprising human robots, terribly designed inspirational quotation images and more than a few examples of the kind of requests that the average person does not want anyone to see.
I’ve rolled past people asking Meta Ai to explain their anxiety dreams, drafts of Eulogies and Brainstorm Wedding Proposal. It is voyeuristic and not in the performative way in most social media; It’s real and personal.
It seems that many people assumed that they share these positions were more like saving them for later review, rather than offering the world a look at the awkward experiments with AI you are performing. Meta has quickly added a new pop-up warning to the process, which makes it clear that everything you post is public, visible to everyone and can even appear elsewhere on the meta-platforms.
If this warning doesn’t seem enough to secure your AI -Privat life on the app, you can completely opt out of Discovery Feed. How to make sure your chats are not an unintended pressure away from public display.
- Open the Meta AI app.
- Tap your profile picture or initials, depending on what represents your digital self.
- Tap “Data and Privacy” and “Manage your information.”
- Tao on “Make all public requests visible to you only,” and “then apply to everyone” in pop-up. This will ensure that when you share a prompt you can only see it.
- If that doesn’t look like enough, you can completely delete the record for any interaction you’ve had with Meta Ai by tapping “Delete all prompt.” It includes any prompt you have written, whether it has been sent, so be sure.
Private Prompt
Even with opt-out enabled and your conversations with Meta AI no longer public, Meta still retains the right to use your chats to improve its models.
It is common among all the great AI providers. It is reportedly anonymized and does not essentially involve publishing your private messages, but theoretically, what you and Meta Ai could say to each other appears in a chat with another hero in one form or another.
It’s a paradox, the more data AI models have, the better they work, but people are reluctant to share too much with an algorithm. There was a minor furor as chatgpt conversations for a short period became visible to other users under certain conditions. It is the second edge of the ubiquitous “We may use your data to improve our systems” declaration in all Terms of Service.
Meta’s food is simply removing the mask, inviting you to send and make it easy for others to see. AI systems develop faster than our understanding of them, and thus the constant drum of transparency. The idea is that the average user, unaware of the hidden complexities of AI, should be informed of how their data is stored and used.
Given how most companies typically address these kinds of problems, Meta is likely to stick to its strategy to fine -tune its privacy options in response to user printing. And remember that if you want to tell your deepest dreams to an AI -Chatbot, make sure it won’t share the details of the world.



